King Carl and Queen Silva chatted animatedly with their children and grandchildren; Princess Victoria, Prince Carl Philip and Princess Madeleine were all joined by their partners and children for the call.

"Easter celebrations look different in many places this year. There are many who are not given the opportunity to meet loved ones," the royals captioned the video.

"The royal family follows the recommendations and does not celebrate a common Easter. However, with technical aids, it is possible to meet digitally to wish Happy Easter, which the Royal Family did earlier in the Easter week."

"Here is a short excerpt from the Royal Family's digital Easter celebration. Happy Easter!"

Millions of people around the world have been forced to give up their normal Easter traditions due to the coronavirus pandemic and social distancing restrictions, but the Swedish royals have proven that Easter can still be full of love even when you're self-isolating.

9 of 40Attribution: Instagram/Prinsparet

Princess Sofia and Prince Carl perform royal duties while social distancing, March 2020

Sweden's royal family is getting on with business while the country isolates due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The diamond and emerald piece was a gift from her in-laws, King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia.

It was the first time in years that Sofia has worn the tiara with its original emerald toppers. In recent times, the former glamour model and reality star has chosen to wear pearls in place of the emeralds.

Her sister-in-law, Crown Princess Victoria, wore the Six Button Tiara which features sparkling diamond rosettes.

15 of 40Attribution: Instagram

Prince Gabriel of Sweden celebrates his second birthday

Prince Gabriel of Sweden, the second child of Sweden's Prince Carl Philip and Princess Sofia, has celebrated his second birthday.

His proud parents shared a collection of adorable snaps of the tot to social media, leaving royal fans to gush over his cheeky grin.

The images were later shared to the royal family's official Instagram page, where it was revealed that Princess Sofia herself took these sweet photos of Gabriel.

It seems that she, like Kate Middleton, has a bit of a knack for photography when it comes to getting cute snaps of her kids!

16 of 40Attribution: Instagram/Polar Music Prize

Swedish Royals at the Polar Music Prize, June 2019

Members of the Swedish royal family have attended the country's largest music awards ceremony, in Stockholm.

Crown Princess Victoria and husband Prince Daniel walked the pink carpet at the Polar Music Prize, which was founded in 1989 by Stig 'Stikkan' Anderson - best known for managing ABBA.

Victoria was joined by her brother Prince Carl Philip, who attended the ceremony with his wife, Princess Sofia.

17 of 40Attribution: Instagram/Swedish Royal Family

Happy birthday Prince Carl

Prince Carl Philip of Sweden turned 40 on May 13.

The fourth-in-line to the Swedish throne celebrated privately with his family, including wife Princess Sofia and children Prince Alexander, three, and Prince Gabriel, 21 months.

The Swedish Royal Family shared an official portrait of Prince Carl (left) to mark the occasion, while a more informal photo was posted to Carl and Sofia's Instagram page, along with a "thank you" from the birthday boy for the well-wishes he'd received.

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Crown Prince Carl Philip and King Carl Gustaf, April 2019

Sweden's Crown Prince Philip (left) took a sneaky selfie with his dad, King Carl Gustaf (right) to mark the King's birthday.

Posting what looks like the quick click we've all been guilty of before, the Royal wrote: "Today we celebrate the King - father, father-in-law and grandfather. Happy Birthday!"

Fans were delighted by the private snap, with hundreds of comments including: "Happy birthday, and so a wonderful picture of father and son".

19 of 40Attribution: Instagram

Crown Prince Carl Phlip, April 2019

Clearly selfies are nothing new for Crown Prince and not against Royal Protocol in Sweden.

Carl Philip happily obliged in posing for another picture over the weekend, before running in a 5km race in aid of The Little Child's Fund, a non-profit supporting medical research and development for premature newborns.